THE MEN WHO STARE AT GOATS - CLOONEY ILLUMINATI FILM ALL THE WAY

It says "Join the New Earth Army" right next to the pyramid. Now that's scary sh*t

Quoting: ZTE

The movie is based on fact and actual occurrences.

"New Earth Army" is actually a reference to the First Earth Battalion project.The project was headed during the late 70s by Jim Channon, a US army Colonel.He had been part of the real goat staring project and various other secret army woo woo ops but I digress.

If the First Earth Battalion program was actually implemented it would destroy the so called Illuminati.

You know what pisses me off? They show Clooney doing "cloud busting", which is also known as "cloud erasing".

This isn't exactly in the mainstream right now.

After millions of fucktards watch this film, they're going to go out and try this shit and IT DOES WORK.

Multiply the effect of so many people doing this on a routine basis and you have major changes in the weather.

Don't believe me? Go try it for yourself.

Quoting: Anonymous Coward 808056

I used to do that in the past and yes it works. I had a dream where a Native American man told me to stop doing that, so I stopped. It's just a power(carrot on the end of the stick) thing anyways. Really doesn't get anyone, anywhere. But yes, if enough people start doing this, I don't wanna know what is going to happen.

It's a movie about a paranormal army for crying out loud. Should they replace the pyramid with a care bear or something?

Gimme a break.

In a comedic look at real life events that are almost too bizarre to believe, a reporter discovers a top-secret wing of the U.S. military when he accompanies an enigmatic Special Forces operator on a mind-boggling mission.

Of course, they may or may not be real, but they are just toying with us now.

Quoting: ZTE

The reporter was on AJ show a few days ago and said everything in the movie really happened except one thing - but I didn't get to hear what that one thing was.....

In 1979, the Peoples’ Republic of China publicly reported that several thousand of its children aged 8-14 were capable of telepathy, clairvoyance, X-ray vision, or psychokinesis. [EN1] Having already heard about this program, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), National Security Agency (NSA), Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), Lawrence Livermore Laboratories, and the US Army were simultaneously pouring billions of dollars into their own similar research.

The Army program was headquartered at Fort Meade, Maryland, and was part of the Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM). Leaders included Generals Edmund Thompson and Albert Stubblebine, and Colonel John Alexander. [EN2]

Officers assigned to the US Army War College at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania [link to www.carlisle.army.mil] contributed research to the project, and "The First Earth Battalion" is essentially a textual copy of one group´s unclassified briefing slides.

Although decidedly New Age, the War College project was not entirely theoretical. Colonel Alexander, for example, went on to become a leader in the Los Alamos National Lab´s non-lethal weapons program. [EN3] Likewise, during the early 1980s Special Forces hired Richard Strozzi Heckler and other outside contractors to provide two A-teams, a total of 25 men, with training in biofeedback, aikido, and "mind-body psychology." In the latter program, a typical training day included running, swimming, "industrial-strength" calisthenics, and 1-1/2 hours of aikido practice. After six months, the soldiers were not aikido masters but they were quantifiably 75% more physically fit than when they started. [EN4]

During correspondence with the editor in January 2000, author Channon had this to say:

The ideas circulated by this mythical force [First Earth Battalion] began with combat of the collective conscience… the principal that if any contest is viewed by the television audience, it will be judged in the end on ethical superiority. Thus cameras mounted on dune buggies. The Army War College has the most exhaustive instructional materials on peacekeeping. All these ideas were first represented by Earth Battalion thinkers and the manual you have.Channon´s statement may sound hyperbolic, but if you substitute "CNN" for "EARTH BATTALION satellite" in the following document, then you have a good description of the United States military´s foreign policy of the 1990s. Likewise, if you think of the global communication system Channon envisioned as the Internet, then it appears that he had a pretty good idea of where ARPANET (the acronym for the Department of Defense´s Advanced Research Projects Agency´s computer network) was headed. Therefore, despite the hyperbole and New Age jargon, Channon´s crystal ball proved clearer than cynics probably expected. And if nothing else, the following paper does suggest why drug testing became common for all ranks during the mid-1980s.

***

TASK FORCE DELTA -- CONCEPT PAPER

Problem statement. Understanding that we must work through people, how can our Army establish and maintain control of changing, interdependent systems to maximize force readiness?

Study thrusts.

Process of Influencing People. The Process of Control. The Dynamics of Change. The Nature of Interdependence. The Science of Systems. The Dynamics of Force Readiness. Concept Paper Title: The First Earth Battalion. Concept: Task Force Delta´s effort needs the track of time. Just as we maintain our perspective of the past and contact with the complexities of the present, our "First Earth Battalion" is the prime place to put thoughts of the future through a basic Army perspective.

Author: LTC James B. Channon

Sponsors: MAJ (P) [Promotable] M.M. Ischinger/COL D.M. Malone

DISCLAIMER

The views expressed in this concept paper are those of the author(s) and do not purport to reflect the positions or policies of the Department of the Army or of the Department of Defense. Requests for additional information or clarification regarding this concept paper should be addressed to HQ TRADOC, ATTN: ATCG-SD, Ft. Monroe, VA 23651."

What's really sad is that you buffoons don't realise that you're completely nuts.

It is just a film. There is no illuminati, NWO, Lizards, it's all fantasy.

I love the way that you all believe the NWOleave signs and clues in things, how the fuck is an NWO agent supposed to know if it is a real sign from his masters or something random?

For gods sake get a life.

BTW. I know J. Ronson(he wrote the book this is based on), the only thing that controls him is alcohol.

NWO?

Quoting: Anonymous Coward 774133

They don't leave signs, hmmmm...ever watch State of Play (2009) with Russell Crowe, blue coffee mug in his apartment with Mason symbol. There was writing underneath it but I couldn't read it.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer (the 1992 movie): the b-ball coach holds up a clipboard in one scene. On the clipboard is the all seeing eye w/in a pyramid and the symbols for Venus and Mars. Why would they have that, he's a basketball coach?

Mean Girls (2004): pentagram on the chalkboard in the classroom where Lindsay Lohan's character has Math. Also in that same room is a large poster with a Zodiac wheel on it. Those things would never, ever be in a public high school classroom.

Hackers (1995): large Metropolis (the movie) poster in Angelina's characters bedroom. She is supposed to be playing a 17 year old girl. I don't care how trendy or intrepid they are, no 17 yr old girl would have that poster from an obscure 1920's German film. If you've been watching The Industry vids on Youtube than you know all the implications that movie has.

So here we have four different movies, beginning in 1992-2009 with various occult references. These are just the blatant references in movies where they don't really belong (you could argue the Buffy one). I just recently started looking for this stuff. I think I spend more time looking in the background on movies now than watching the plot unfold.

So do goats have anything to do with illuminati? Or was it just a random animal they decided to pick for the theme of the movie?

Quoting: AmandaLovesYou 971817

the goat is symbolism to satan they use it everywhere.. baphomet etc..

the movie itself wasnt telling an evil story- rather a true one- but intentions were evil and the movie is meant to make anyone who can do those things seem crazy.. just like many other movies- insert hidden truth so it dissproves it all in one..